Until ten years ago, most astronomers did not believe stardust could enter
our Solar System. Then ESA’s Ulysses spaceprobe discovered minute stardust
particles leaking through the Sun’s magnetic shield, into the realm of Earth
and the other planets. Now, the same spaceprobe has shown that a flood of
dusty particles is heading our way.
Since its launch in 1990, Ulysses has constantly monitored how much stardust
enters the Solar System from the interstellar space around it. Using an
on-board instrument called DUST, scientists have discovered that stardust can
actually approach the Earth and other planets, but its flow is governed by
the Sun’s magnetic field, which behaves as a powerful gate-keeper bouncing
most of it back. However, during solar maximum ? a phase of intense activity
inside the Sun that marks the end of each 11-year solar cycle ? the magnetic
field becomes disordered as its polarity reverses. As a result, the Sun’s
shielding power weakens and more stardust can sneak in.
What is surprising in this new Ulysses discovery is that the amount of
stardust has continued to increase even after the solar activity calmed down
and the magnetic field resumed its ordered shape in 2001.
Scientists believe that this is due to the way in which the polarity changed
during solar maximum. Instead of reversing completely, flipping north to
south, the Sun’s magnetic poles have only rotated at halfway and are now more
or less lying sideways along the Sun’s equator. This weaker configuration of
the magnetic shield is letting in two to three times more stardust than at
the end of the 1990s. Moreover, this influx could increase by as much as ten
times until the end of the current solar cycle in 2012.
The stardust itself is very fine ? just one-hundredth of the width of a human
hair. It is unlikely to have much effect on the planets but it is bound to
collide with asteroids, chipping off larger dust particles, again increasing
the amount of dust in the inner Solar System. On the one hand, this means
that the solar panels of spacecraft may be struck more frequently by dust,
eventually causing a gradual loss of power, and that space observatories
looking in the plane of the planets may have to cope with the haze of more
sunlight diffused by the dust.
On the other hand, this astronomical occurrence could offer a powerful new
way to look at the icy comets in the Kuiper Belt region of the outer Solar
System. Stardust colliding with them will chip off fragments that can be
studied collectively with ESA’s forthcoming infrared space telescope,
Herschel. This might provide vital insight into a poorly understood region of
the Solar System, where the debris from the formation of the planets has
accumulated.
Back down on Earth, everyone may notice an increase in the number of sporadic
meteors that fall from the sky every night. These meteors, however, will be
rather faint.
Astronomers still do not know whether the current stardust influx, apart from
being favoured by the particular configuration of the Sun’s magnetic field,
is also enhanced by the thickness of the interstellar clouds into which the
Solar System is moving. Currently located at the edge of what astronomers
call the local interstellar cloud, our Sun is about to join our closest
stellar neighbour Alpha Centauri in its cloud, which is less hot but denser.
ESA’s Ulysses data make it finally possible to study how stardust is
distributed along the path of the Solar System through the local galactic
environment. However, as it takes over 70 thousand years to traverse a
typical galactic cloud, no abrupt changes are expected in the short term.
Notes to editors
The results of this investigation will appear in the October 2003 issue of
Journal of Geophysical Research. The investigation has been conducted by a
team led by Markus Landgraf of ESA’s European Space Operation Centre in
Darmstadt (Germany) and including Harald Kroeger, Nicolas Altobelli, and
Eberhard Gruen of the Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics in Heidelberg
(Germany).
Ulysses is the first mission to study the environment of space above and
below the Sun’s poles. It is a joint mission with NASA and has been in space
since 1990, after a mission extension agreed in 2000. Launched from the Space
Shuttle Discovery in October 1990, Ulysses has now completed two orbits,
passing both the Sun’s north and south pole on each occasion. Its data gave
scientists their first look at the variable effect that the Sun has on the
space that surrounds it.
The Ulysses DUST experiment provides direct observations of dust grains
weighing less than a millionth of a gram in interplanetary space as Ulysses
moves along an orbit that takes it periodically away from the Sun and from
the plane of the planets ? a disc known as the ecliptic. DUST measures the
mass, speed, flight direction, and electric charge of individual dust
particles.
Astronomers wanted to know what portion of dust is provided by comets and
asteroids and what, instead, comes directly from interstellar space. By
taking measurements when Ulysses was farthest from the Sun and high above the
ecliptic, in regions where cometary dust can hardly reach, scientists were
able to detect and isolate particles of stardust entering the Solar System
from the outer space. To confirm that these dust grains are indeed of
interstellar origin, Landgraf and his collaborators verified that the dust
had the same flight direction and speed as the atoms of helium which are
known to come exclusively from interstellar space.